The House on 92nd Street (1945)

Prior to the United States entering WWII, the FBI is monitoring known and suspected Nazi agents in the country.
Purely by happenstance, they discover a Nazi cell in the US trying to smuggle information back to Germany on Process 97, a key part of the American atomic bomb
development. The FBI's Inspector George Briggs (Lloyd Nolan) leads this case, known as the Christopher Case as the unknown leader of the Nazi cell has the code
name Mr. Christopher. Briggs' team cannot just bring in the known Nazi agents, but rather they have to find out exactly how the information is being leaked and
who Mr. Christopher is. They co-opt the assistance of William Dietrich (William Eythe), a German-American university student who the Nazis tried to recruit.
As such, he will be working for the FBI as a double agent. Unknown on either side, it becomes a race as Dietrich's Nazi contacts in the United States, led by
Elsa Gebhardt (Signe Hasso), don't fully trust him and come ever so close to discovering his double agent status, while Briggs, Dietrich and their associates
close in on the leak and the identity of Mr. Christopher. The modi operandi for both sides change slightly with December 7, 1941.

Broadway (btw Morris Street and Rector Street) Manhattan.

otsoNY Comments: The "House on 92nd Street" used in the film was actually located on 93rd street. The building has since been demolished.

55 East 93rd Street and Madison Avenue, Manhattan.

The original building has since been demolished.

West 59th Street and Columbus Circle, Manhattan.

George Washington Bridge.

George Washington Bridge

The George Washington Bridge is a suspension bridge spanning the Hudson River, connecting the Washington Heights
neighborhood in the borough of Manhattan in New York City to Fort Lee in New Jersey by means of Interstate 95, U.S. Route 1/9, U.S. Route 46, which is entirely in New Jersey,
ends halfway across the bridge at the state border. The GWB is considered one of the world's busiest bridges in terms of vehicle traffic.